A perfect park day is the plan. But when a ride temporarily closes, its line fades. WalkOnAlerts notifies you the second it reopens, so you can get there before the crowds do.
There's no official definition, but most park-goers agree: it means a minimal wait. The problem is, they barely exist anymore. Parks are packed year-round. So where do walk-ons come from in 2026? Either you get lucky enough to be there on a rare slow day, you pay hundreds of dollars for a fancy ticket upgrade, or you just happen to be nearby when a ride comes back from a Breakdown.
A ride reopens after a breakdown with a genuinely low posted wait. You're walking straight on.
The posted wait might be 35 min, but the ride normally runs 75. You're saving real time on headliners.
Each park is different. This example is from Magic Kingdom 2025 data.
Read the full analysis →We tracked 86,500+ ride breakdowns across 31 US theme parks in 2025. Disneyland alone averages 40 breakdowns per day. Not every one leads to a walk-on — but you can't catch the ones that do if you don't know about them.
Survival analysis on 86,500+ breakdown events gives us clues about the typical walk-on window for each ride.
Chances of Having a Low Wait Time
Astro Orbiter — Walt Disney World · Walk-on probability by wait threshold after reopening
Read the full analysis →It's all about timing and a little luck. You can't play the game if you don't know it's on.
You're in line. The ride breaks down. Everyone around you is guessing. You have data.
WalkOnAlerts analyzes historical breakdown patterns — time of day, ride-specific recovery times, and duration statistics from thousands of past breakdowns — to tell you whether to stay put or cut your losses.
Powered by breakdown data from ThemeParkHallOfShame.com
Lightning Lane and Universal Express Pass are great at what they do — scheduled skip-the-line access to working rides. But breakdowns aren’t on anyone’s schedule. Across Disney and Universal parks, rides go down dozens of times per day. WalkOnAlerts watches for those moments and alerts you within 60 seconds when a ride comes back online.
Scheduled access to working rides. Book or tap in. Skip the standby line.
$27–$110+ per person, per dayInstant alerts when rides come back. No booking. No refreshing.
$7.99 per familyUse them together. Or use WalkOnAlerts on its own — it covers 31 parks, not just Disney and Universal.
Nobody wants a ride to break down on vacation. But if one does, WalkOnAlerts turns that setback into a walk-on — with alerts faster than any other app.
Free on iPhone and Android. Set up in under a minute.
Choose from Disney, Universal, Six Flags, and more — then pick the rides you care about most.
We check ride status every minute. When a ride reopens, your phone buzzes before the crowds even notice.
This is the game: when the timing lines up, you walk right on. Even when you don't score, you still win — it means the rides are running.
We hope you never need us. But with 40+ breakdowns a day at Disneyland alone, you probably will — and when that moment comes, you'll be ready.